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Friday, April 26, 2024

Illinois' Anderson challenges Pritzker's emergency authority as 'constituents demand'

Neilanderson

Sen. Neil Anderson Anderson argues that the governor’s actions surrounding COVID-19 have only served to make a bad situation worse for most residents. | Photo Courtesy of Neil Anderson

Sen. Neil Anderson Anderson argues that the governor’s actions surrounding COVID-19 have only served to make a bad situation worse for most residents. | Photo Courtesy of Neil Anderson

Republican state Sen. Neil Anderson argues Illinois’ troubled state scream for change in the way Gov. J.B. Pritzker has elected to battle COVID-19.

“For nearly two years now, we've seen the governor take a unilateral approach at mitigations and mandates,” Anderson said at an Oct. 26 news conference on the subject. “Trying to figure out the best way to get people safely back to work and get our state back on its feet should not be done by rule by fiat by the governor. In his traditional go it alone approach, the governor's encouraged the public to be all in with Illinois, but refused to allow elected officials that represent three co-equal branches of government have been left out of the process time and time again.”

Anderson argues that the governor’s actions have only served to make a bad situation worse for most residents.  

“This has impacted communities on the borders like my district and I'm sure some of my colleagues, too,” he added. “People are fleeing Illinois to Iowa to go shopping, to buy fuel, and to have the retail experience. By continuing to exclude us as leaders and local leaders, he has caused a huge problem not only with government but with trust in the process.”

Anderson points to steps made the governor that he argues have served to further divide people.

“At first, the shutdown pitted essential workers against non-essential workers,” he said. “Then, it was okay to go to Walmart to buy something, but you couldn't go to your local hardware store. Now, in the latest example he's creating a huge issue on a local level with our school boards, telling them that they don't know what's best for their schools, that he does. When does it stop?”

Anderson sees Senate Bill 103 as the start in bringing about the changes he feels are needed. The bill he is now co-sponsoring seeks to amend the Illinois Emergency Management Agency Act to establish that “after an initial proclamation declaring that a disaster exists, the governor may only extend that declaration or make further proclamations regarding the same disaster if the General Assembly passes a resolution within 5 calendar days that approves the extension or further proclamation.”

Anderson argues it’s what voters all over the state are now demanding.

“At what point is it no longer an emergency?” he added. “Our constituents demand that we go back to recognizing the three co-equal branches of government and what our constitutional republic is made up of. He was elected governor not dictator.”

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